Bosnians have marked the 10th anniversary of the outbreak of war in the region, in memory of more than 200,000 who died during the brutal conflict.

People laid flowers at the spot in Sarajevo where some of the first victims were killed and at the graves of friends and family who died in the almost four years of fighting.

The shooting at the Sarajevo rally claimed the war's first victims

"My memories are bad. It was a time of aggression when many innocent people lost their lives here," said Nedzad Kovacevic, putting flowers at a friend's grave in a Sarajevo ceremony.

There were few official commemorations of the anniversary but artists organised a day of events, including theatre performances and photo exhibitions in Sarajevo to remember what people endured during the city's 43-month siege.

More than six years after the conflict ended, the scars of war can still be seen in Bosnia. The economy remains in disarray, and many have argued that only the international peacekeeping presence has kept the country stitched together.

Neighbour against neighbour

To this day there remains debate even over the origins of the conflict.

How it unfolded

April 1992: Civil war breaks out, Sarajevo siege

April 1993: Muslim-Croat war starts

March 1994: Muslim-Croat war ends

July 1995: Srebrenica massacre

December 1995: Dayton peace accord

Bosnian Serbs claim the war began on 1 March 1992, with the shooting of a guest at a Serb wedding.

However to most, especially the Bosnian Muslims, the war began on 6 April 1992.

That day, the European Community recognised Bosnia as an independent state and Serbs snipers opened fire on an anti-war demonstration.

In the fighting which followed, Serbs, Muslims and Croats were pitted against one another and atrocities were committed on all sides, as neighbour turned on neighbour.

The international community attempted to intervene in the conflict with a largely ineffective UN-led peacekeeping force.

Finally, in 1995, under US pressure, it brokered the Dayton peace accord and committed peacekeeping troops as well as billions of dollars in reconstruction aid to the region.

'Unnatural state'

The international community's High Representative, Wolfgang Petritsch, who oversees Bosnia's reconstruction, praised the progress made since the accord was signed.

The victims

About 200,000 dead

12,000 killed in Sarajevo siege

Up to 8,000 Muslim men and boys killed in Srebrenica

"The people of Bosnia-Hercegovina have moved on from the bitterness of the war and its aftermath. They stand on the brink of European integration," he said.

The President of the European Commission, Romano Prodi, who was in Sarajevo for the anniversary, called for investors to help the country's economic reconstruction.

But Bosnia's wartime Foreign Minister, Haris Silajdzic, said little had been accomplished in terms of bringing Bosnia's different ethnic communities together.

What we have is anything but a multi-ethnic Bosnia

Haris Silajdzic

"Unfortunately there is not much that is positive to draw on from this experience," he told Reuters news agency.

"What we have is anything but a multi-ethnic Bosnia. It is an ethnically divided state which is unnatural."

Under the Dayton agreement, which ended the war, the country was divided into Muslim-Croat federation and an autonomous Bosnian Serb entity, Republika Srpska, each with its own government.

War crimes

The UN war crimes tribunal, set up in the wake of the ceasefire, has since issued indictments against dozens of suspected war criminals, and the first genocide convictions were delivered last year.

Former Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic is currently on trial at the Hague court on charges which include genocide in the Bosnian conflict.